âBut the Old City?'
âIt's still there. Very overcrowded though. They say there's over a million Chinese living there now, in just that little square mile. And it looks it â slush and squalor and decay everywhere. And the stench â suffocating! They say it's unsafe â¦'
Chen Mu shrugged as he set up a tea tray. âWesterners always considered it unsafe.'
âPerhaps â but forget the Chinese City for a minute. Here, give me that tray â I have a gift for you.'
Chen Mu stroked the small ivory and bamboo tiles that lay in the drawers of the rosewood box. He picked one up and scrutinised the ideograph carved into it:
Among the mountains shines a bright moon
. He put the tile back in place and closed the box. âThank you, it's a beautiful gift. Do you play, Master Edward?'
âEveryone in Shanghai does; Mahjong's the latest trend.'
âA trend as old as Confucius, some say. But I've never played. Always too busy with work, unfortunately ⦠So â you must teach me. The pupil will become the teacher, and the teacher will become the pupil!'
âIf you'd like.'
âI'd like. But not today. Today I want to hear about your trip. Did you find anything for your museum? And your mother? Your wife? Are they well?'
âThey're fine. I'm spending a week with Mother at Walpinya before going back to Sydney. She's getting old, of course, and you can't get her to admit it. But the manager's excellent. The station's doing well.'
âThey're not affected by the Wall Street crash?'
Edward shook his head. âNo, not really. Sometimes I think Shanghai and Walpinya must be the only two places in the world that'll remain immune to it.'
âI wouldn't be too confident just yet â it's very early days. I've a feeling things are going to get much worse, and for a long time to come. But Walpinya should be safe. Your grandfather was clever, and built his fortune on concrete, solid things â land, cattle, mines â¦'
âI suppose.
Boeuf bouilli
â boiled beef, the secret of Walpinya's wealth. Our boys ended up calling it bully beef â did you know that?' Chen Mu shook his head. âOnly my grandfather would use a war to double his wealth â¦'
âNo, there've been others. Your grandfather was just a wise business man.'
âMaybe. But the way I see it, he just saw an opportunity and grabbed it â got in first, as usual. Probably called in every favour, undercut everyone else â anything to make a profit. It's how he did things, you know â¦'
Chen Mu was not surprised by Edward's attitude â he knew there had been friction between Matthew Dawson and his grandson, not the least of which was Edward's refusal to join him on the land. He'd often wondered if Edward going to Oxford was more an escape than a real wish of obtaining a degree.
âAnd your mother? Julia? Are they well?' he asked, wanting to turn the conversation.
âYes, they're both well. Julia and I are expecting a child.'
Once more Chen Mu ignored the hint of bitterness in Edward's voice â he'd guessed Edward's marriage was not a happy one. Julia Hampshire â now Billings â was the only child of Robert Hampshire, who owned the property adjoining Walpinya Station. She and Edward had dated every time Edward had returned home for holidays from boarding school, then from Oxford. They'd married within a month of Edward graduating. Chen Mu had wondered, at the time, how well Edward really knew Julia, and if the rumours Chen Mu had heard were true, it was Julia who'd insisted he take up the position of curator of Chinese antiquities at the Technological Museum of Sydney, rather than any other position he'd been offered. Used to her father's money and getting her own way, Julia had quickly established herself as one of Sydney's brightest socialites, with mention of her attending all the important functions appearing regularly in the papers. Chen Mu had noted, however, that Edward was rarely mentioned.
âA child is wonderful news. Congratulations! When is it due?'
âEarly next year. Julia's having a bad time of it â she doesn't like her social activities curtailed. Says she's too young. And of course, now that she's showing â¦'
âShe'll soon be back doing what she likes, once the child's born.'
âMaybe â¦'
The two men stared into the fire, each lost in his own thoughts. Chen Mu was saddened by Edward's obvious cynicism. He thought of the lonely little boy he'd befriended and taught to speak Mandarin; he'd never imagined it would spark an interest that would shape the boy's life. Their friendship, and the Chinese lessons, had continued all through Edward's schooling and even when he'd left for further studies in England, via letters. But though they'd become very close, Chen Mu had never been able to drop the title of âMaster', as Edward would have liked him to do. And neither could he prod too deeply into Edward's unhappiness.
But he wasn't surprised at Edward's bitterness. Under this apathetic attitude, he knew Edward to be a passionate man, but he'd never detected much passion in his friend's voice whenever he talked of Julia. He'd heard the talk around town at the time of how fitting this marriage was, how wise the joining of two prominent families. He suspected Matthew Dawson and his daughter had exerted pressure on Edward, and that his friend had been too weak to oppose it. How unlike his own marriage! He had adored Sahira, and she him. He still loved her deeply â always would â and there were times when he still spoke to her, as if she were there, right next to him in the room â¦
Chen Mu's thoughts returned to Edward's expected child. Would it make their marriage any happier? Maybe â or destroy it completely. He remembered how much he'd wanted a child, and how ashamed of that wish he'd been in the end.
He sat in the doctor's waiting room. Behind closed doors Sahira was being examined. For weeks now she'd been pale and easily tired, and occasionally he'd seen her, thoughtful, feeling her belly when she thought no one was watching. Chen Mu was sure she was pregnant, though she'd denied it and become angry when he'd mentioned it
.
âMr Chen? You can come in now.'
He found Sahira curled up in a chair, crying softly
.
âSahira?'
She closed her eyes tight and shook her head
.
âSahira, what's wrong?' Chen Mu fought a growing sense of panic
.
âSit down, Mr Chen, please.'
âNo.' He crouched beside her and took her hands in his. âSahira, look at me. Tell me what's wrong. Tell me!' But Sahira would not open her eyes
.
âYour wife is ill, Mr Chen. Very ill. Please, sit down.'
Chen Mu sat, but he did not let go of Sahira's hands
.
âWhen I examined your wife, I found a mass in her abdomen. Quite a large one â¦'
For a split second Chen Mu wanted to tell the doctor he was wrong, that the mass he'd felt was not in Sahira's abdomen but in her womb. His long-awaited child. But Sahira's grief told him there was no error
.
â⦠together with the recent vomiting. It leaves me no doubt. I believe your wife has cancer.'
âNo.'
âMr Chen, I have no doubt. Your wifeâ'
âBut you can do something. You can cure it.'
âNo, Mr Chen. It's too late. We don't have a cure. At best we can â¦'
Chen Mu blocked out the doctor's words. He didn't want to listen. Wished he hadn't heard any of those words. But it was too late â he couldn't get them out of his head. Cancer. A death sentence. His beautiful Sahira was going to die. No! He wouldn't allow it! He'd find other doctors, men more learned than this one
.
Men who would know how to cure her. No matter what it took, no matter how much it cost. He would get into debt that would take him the rest of his life to repay if it meant his Sahira would live. He wanted to scream. Scream at the doctor. Look at him â how could he sit there so calmly and tell him his wife was going to die? What sort of a man was he? What did he know, really?
Chen Mu had wanted to take Sahira to other doctors, but she'd refused. He should have insisted, and the fact that he hadn't tormented him to this day. But Sahira only wanted to rest. She stopped work and spent most of her time sitting in a chair near wherever Chen Mu was working, just watching, as if she wanted to take in every detail of him before it was too late. But soon she could no longer do even that, and Chen Mu spent days by her side, mopping up the black vomit and encouraging her to sip water, not caring whether he lost his job or not.
Sahira died late one autumn afternoon, even before the trees had lost their leaves. It had been the darkest period of his life, and he remembered how, after her funeral, everyone's condolences had so angered him that he'd wanted to smash their sympathetic faces; he'd hated them for living, even hated young Edward for crying at the funeral. What right did they have to live when his Sahira did not?
He'd taken off into the bush with no more than a water canteen, not caring where he was going, or whether he lived or died. All he could think about was how his wish for a child had blinded him to her illness. For three days he'd just walked, hating himself, surviving only on water until so exhausted he'd fall asleep against a tree, and when he woke he'd walk some more. Weak from lack of food, he'd come to a part of the river that reminded him of the swimming hole at Walpinya Station where Sahira had first become his, and he'd stayed there just staring at the water, remembering, until at last he'd been able to grieve. By the time he got back to Walpinya he knew she would have wanted him to go on â he had to accept that his Sahira was gone. The universal order of things â¦
11
Edward observed Chen Mu, who appeared to be dozing. There were times he wished he could be more like his friend â such a peaceful, humble little man ⦠What must it be like to live a life free from any problem or worry? To know what each day will bring? Never having to compromise nor bend to anyone else's will? Strange that this simple little man should mean more to him than his own family. But then, Chen Mu and Sahira had been more like parents to him than his own family. And Chen Mu never expected anything from him â never questioned his motives nor disapproved of his behaviour, unlike his mother and grandfather â¦
He still remembered their anger when he'd finally drummed up the courage to write home from Oxford, to announce that he was not studying Agricultural Economics as they assumed him to be, because he had no intention of following in his grandfather's footsteps. Matthew Dawson had threatened to disinherit him, and it was only Julia's intervention that calmed the old man. She too had no intention of staying on the land, and she knew how to manipulate the men in her life.
They were similar in many ways, he and Julia, so why did he feel so little for her? But then, he knew Julia felt the same about him â he was just an accessory to her, someone to provide a level of respectability to hide behind, so as to allow her freedoms in Sydney that would not be accepted of a single woman. No wonder he had jumped at the chance of going to Shanghai!
Edward thought of the pleasures of Shanghai â pleasures he didn't feel comfortable telling Chen Mu about. Released from the social constraints of home, Edward â like many Westerners â had not hesitated to sample the pleasures of the East â pleasures that would be frowned upon, here in Australia.
In Shanghai, he'd dined and tangoed, listened to jazz and drunk cocktails till morning, then slept a few hours only to waken in time for more cocktails and dinner dances, followed by more clubs and more cabarets.
He'd met a gorgeous cigar-smoking woman who proudly told him she much preferred sex with women than with men, but who might be willing to make an exception in his case ⦠if he didn't mind a bit of pain. And he'd met a highly perfumed young man who shyly told him
he
much preferred sex with both men and women at the same time, and who offered to introduce Edward to these delights.